<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9401130760
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940412
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, April 12, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ERIC SEALS;Photo Color STEVEN R. NICKERSON
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


S:
(ERIC SEALS/Detroit Free Press)
Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer prepares to hurl the first pitch of
the home season -- and his administration --  Monday afternoon
at Tiger Stadium.  Gov. John Engler also participated in the
ceremony and heard  the first boos of the season.
(STEVEN R. NICKERSON/Detroit Free Press)
Alto Reed, saxophonist for Bob Seger's Silver Bullet Band,
belts  out the national anthem before a crowd of 50,314 at
Tiger Stadium.
(Left:  WILLIAM ARCHIE/Detroit Free Press
Above:  STEVEN R. NICKERSON/Detroit Free Press)
Left, Yvonne Barron of Flint is decked  out in her tiger finest
for Opening Day. Above, Billy Radabaugh, 12, of Lake Orion is
in pursuit of autographs in Tiger Stadium before most of
Monday's crowd arrives.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
OPENING DAY '94: ORIOLES 7, TIEGRS 4
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CITY NEEDS THIS KIND OF LIFE MORE OFTEN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
A city.

  Mobs of people spilling out of corner hamburger joints, noisy pubs,
open-doored restaurants. Lines for souvenirs. Lines for bathrooms. Taxi cabs
stopping, passengers stepping out.

  A city.
  A traffic cop directing streams of pedestrians, whistles between his teeth,
grinning when a passing teenager offers him his hot dog.
  A city.
  Motown music blasting over loudspeakers,  Martha & the Vandellas, "Calling
out around the world . . .," people sitting at sidewalk tables in the Tiger
Plaza, drinking beers, wiping foam from their mouths and laughing at some
private joke.
  A city. Opening day in Detroit is all about this now. Becoming a city.
Acting like a city. It is more than just the first local baseball game of the
year, it is now the one day -- some say the only  day -- we grab the props on
our urban stage and actually put on a show. The one day when we need all those
parking lots that otherwise sit empty, when we fill all those restaurants that
otherwise beg  for business, when we require a traffic cop to hold off one
group and wave on another, instead of a neon "don't walk" sign blinking
silently to nobody and nothing.
  What is the city but the people?  I didn't say that. Shakespeare did. And
if  Willie were around Monday afternoon, outside Tiger Stadium, seeing the
bubbling cauldron of traffic, music, ice cream and souvenir buying, he would
say, "Wherefore art thou . . . the rest of the year?"
 
  Or, in baseball talk, let's play two.
  Or three. Or four. Or 50. What Detroit needs is not another opening day,
but many more of them, throughout the year,  days when this metropolis -- laid
low by so many problems -- can shake off its dust, straighten the shoulders on
its skyscrapers, and behave the way it should behave. Like a city, busy and
bustling.
  We need this city.
  And to help it live, we should have a new stadium.
Sentiment is not enough
  Now, I tend to stay out of the stadium debate, because I think too much hot
air has been blown  on it already. I also respect those who want to save Tiger
Stadium, because their passion is sincere.
  But many a wrong path has been taken by passion. Consider one of the
strongest arguments by these  people: nostalgia. They talk about the time
their father took them to the game at Michigan and Trumbull, and when their
father's father took him. They talk about connecting the dots of baseball
tradition, like popcorn on a Christmas string, and how we should guard this
with care.
  Moving sentiment -- and in an ideal world, maybe reason enough to leave the
stadium untouched. But we do not have an ideal  world. And the truth is, most
children -- no matter how well-raised -- don't really appreciate when you tell
them, "Son, on this field, I saw Al Kaline hit a homer." What the kid wants is
to see Cecil  Fielder hit a homer. And the ice cream man. And a big screen
full of replays. 
  Memories are for parents. What the child gets is the thrill of a journey
with someone he or she loves, eating hot dogs, watching the game, stopping
somewhere on the way home. A future memory. And it seems to me the more of
these you create,  the better you've done -- whether you do it where Al Kaline
played or not.
  How do you do it if you only go once a year? Monday was a wonderful splash
of life at Michigan and Trumbull, but the truth is, after opening day, going
to Tigers games ceases to be special, or, in  many cases, even desirable --
especially if the team is in a down year.
  And one reason is simple: Going to a game here is nothing but going to a
game.
Not like other cities
  In New York, you  hear people say, "We went into the city, did some
shopping, saw the Knicks play the Bulls." In Boston, you hear people say, "We
ate Regina's pizza in the North End, saw the Celtics, hung out at  Faneuil
Hall." 
  In Baltimore, they say, "We spent the day in town, went to Camden Yards,
had a blast." In Cleveland, they are saying it now about Jacobs Field.
  And in Detroit, you go to see the Tigers,  park as close as you can, watch
the game, and get the hell out. What is there nearby to attract you? Besides a
few small shops and food places, the surrounding area is a critic's vision of
Detroit -- empty lots, old buildings and people looking over their shoulders.
  Now, I know the proposed new stadium in the theater district is not
perfect -- but it is a start. Cities build like caterpillars  stretch. One
section pushes out the next. There are at least some support businesses there,
restaurants, clubs, things to do that could make a Tigers game part of a whole
day or evening.
  People  should have this option. There may be a night when a visiting star
pitcher is on the mound, and someone just wants to buy a quick ticket and see
a few innings, then walk out and do some late shopping.  Why not?
  There may be corporate types who want to take their clients to a luxury
suite, stay a few innings and take off.  Why not? It's their money. And if
they're leaving to go to a nearby restaurant  or club, all the better. These
people may make lousy sports fans, but they pay for their entertainment.
  These people -- and many more -- can be the nucleus of some life in
downtown. Provided it's  safe and convenient. What gets people to urban areas
is not theories but little things: Do they have to drive from the stadium to
the next stop? Do the streets have potholes? Is it well lit? Do they  hear
music playing? Are there good restaurants within walking distance? Does it
feel secure? Are fashionable people there? Is it "cool" ?
  Michigan and Trumbull, for all its tradition, does not pass the checklist
on all these counts.
  So, on Monday, the new mayor, Dennis Archer, threw out one of the first
pitches. And it was a fresh face. But if he's back doing it again next year
and the year  after, with no promise of a new stadium -- or worse, the
possibility of  a stadium outside of Detroit -- it won't only be old, it'll be
depressing.
  I know baseball stadiums don't save cities. The  never have. But we're not
talking ultimate salvation here. We're talking first stages of rehab. A start.
Hope.
  A city. People. Commerce. The perpetual whirl. When the game got out of
hand Monday,  before 4 p.m., the stadium emptied, and from the upper ramp you
could see streams of people crossing the streets. Most were not stopping in
next-door pubs, or doing some shopping; most were heading to  their cars to go
home.
  In another era, we might have the luxury of picking our landmarks. But this
city is in a terrible downward spiral, and when that happens, you worry first
about survival, nothing more. If putting a stadium in a downtown site like the
theater district, where it can ignite other businesses, create noise, create
music, if it can create the magic of opening day even a dozen times  a year --
well, that's 11 more than we're getting right now. And we'll have done
something to keep the lungs of this city breathing.
  That is every bit as worthwhile as nostalgia. And right now, more
important.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASEBALL; OPENING; DTIGERS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
